The answer is a matter of opinion, and you're going to get different answers from different people. Here's <u>my</u> take on it:
The writers, producers and advertising sponsors of these shows certainly don't think they're boring. And <em><u>definitely</u></em> neither do the TV networks that decide which ones to broadcast.
I'm not trying to say "The experts don't think they're boring, so you must be wrong". I'm trying to say that different people have different opinions about the same shows, and in <em>your</em> case,<em> you</em> find them boring.
My conclusion is this: I think you're finding TV shows boring nowadays because you're growing as a person. You've grown, developed, and matured to the point where you're above the level of audience that the shows are pitched for. That's a very good thing !
You're sad because you used to get pleasure and entertainment from TV, and now it doesn't give you those things. That's like losing an old friend, that you used to have such fun playing with, but he just doesn't do it for you any more.
Now that you've grown up, you've made new friends. With them, you do things that you wouldn't even understand with your younger friends. And you develop new interests, like ... I don't know ... books, movies, hobbies, your church, your profession, learning new things, developing new skills, exercising your brain, writing, volunteer work, ham radio, building fine furniture, singing, learning to write music, raising tropical plants, sculpture, politics ... whatever turns you on. Some people never grow past the stage where staring at the tube is all they need in life, because they don't have what it takes to be interested in anything else. Those are the people that TV is aimed at. But you have more, and that's why TV isn't enough for you.
There are other possible reasons why TV bores you. But until I know more about you, I think it's a very, very good sign.
F = Gmm'/r² .............................. Equation 1
Where F = Gravitational force between the person and the refrigerator, m = mass of the person, m' = mass of the refrigerator, r = distance between the person and the refrigerator. G = gravitational universal constant.
Given: m = 70 kg, m' = 200 kg, r = 0.5 m
Constant: G = 6.67×10⁻¹¹ Nm²/kg².
F = (6.67×10⁻¹¹×70×200)/0.5²
F = 93380×10⁻¹¹/0.25
F = 373520×10⁻¹¹
F = 3.735×10⁻⁶ N
Hence the force between the person and the refrigerator = 3.735×10⁻⁶ N
First examine the force of friction at the slipping point where Ff = µsFN = µsmg.
the mass of the car is unknown,
The only force on the car that is not completely in the vertical direction is friction, so let us consider the sums of forces in the tangential and centerward directions.
First the tangential direction
∑Ft =Fft =mat
And then in the centerward direction ∑Fc =Ffc =mac =mv²t/r
Going back to our constant acceleration equations we see that v²t = v²ti +2at∆x = 2at πr/2
So going backwards and plugging in Ffc =m2atπr/ 2r =πmat